appeal

Definitions

from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition

n. An earnest or urgent request, entreaty, or supplication.

n. A resort to a higher authority or greater power, as for sanction, corroboration, or a decision: an appeal to reason; an appeal to her listener's sympathy.

n. Law The transfer of a case from a lower to a higher court for a new hearing.

n. Law A case so transferred.

n. Law A request for a new hearing.

n. The power of attracting or of arousing interest: a city with special appeal for museumgoers.

intransitive v. To make an earnest or urgent request, as for help.

intransitive v. To have recourse, as for corroboration; resort: I appeal to your sense of justice.

intransitive v. Law To make or apply for an appeal.

intransitive v. To be attractive or interesting: The idea didn't appeal to me.

transitive v. Law To transfer or apply to transfer (a case) to a higher court for rehearing.

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License

v. To accuse (someone of something).

v. To apply for the removal of a cause from an inferior to a superior judge or court for the purpose of reexamination of for decision. --Tomlins. WP

v. To call upon another to decide a question controverted, to corroborate a statement, to vindicate one's rights, etc.; as, I appeal to all mankind for the truth of what is alleged. Hence: To call on one for aid; to make earnest request.

v. To be attractive; as, that idea appeals to me means "I find the idea attractive".

v. To ask an umpire for a decision of whether a batsman is out or not

n. (a) An application for the removal of a cause or suit from an inferior to a superior judge or court for reëxamination or review. (b) The mode of proceeding by which such removal is effected. (c) The right of appeal. (d) An accusation; a process which formerly might be instituted by one private person against another for some heinous crime demanding punishment for the particular injury suffered, rather than for the offense against the public. (e) An accusation of a felon at common law by one of his accomplices, which accomplice was then called an approver. --Tomlins. --Bouvier.

n. A summons to answer to a charge. --John Dryden.

n. A call upon a person or an authority for proof or decision, in one's favor; reference to another as witness; a call for help or a favor; entreaty.

n. Resort to physical means; recourse.

n. The power to attract or interest

n. : the act, by the fielding side, of asking an umpire for a decision of whether a batsman is out or not.

from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English

n.

n. An application for the removal of a cause or suit from an inferior to a superior judge or court for reëxamination or review.

n. The mode of proceeding by which such removal is effected.

n. The right of appeal.

n. An accusation; a process which formerly might be instituted by one private person against another for some heinous crime demanding punishment for the particular injury suffered, rather than for the offense against the public.

n. An accusation of a felon at common law by one of his accomplices, which accomplice was then called an approver. See approvement.

n. A summons to answer to a charge.

n. A call upon a person or an authority for proof or decision, in one's favor; reference to another as witness; a call for help or a favor; entreaty.

n. Resort to physical means; recourse.

transitive v.

transitive v. To make application for the removal of (a cause) from an inferior to a superior judge or court for a rehearing or review on account of alleged injustice or illegality in the trial below. We say, the cause was appealed from an inferior court.

transitive v. To charge with a crime; to accuse; to institute a private criminal prosecution against for some heinous crime.

transitive v. To summon; to challenge.

transitive v. To invoke.

transitive v. To apply for the removal of a cause from an inferior to a superior judge or court for the purpose of reëxamination of for decision.

transitive v. To call upon another to decide a question controverted, to corroborate a statement, to vindicate one's rights, etc.. Hence: To call on one for aid; to make earnest request.

from The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia

To call; summon; challenge.

In law: To remove, as a cause, from a lower to a higher judge or court. See appeal, n., 2 .

Formerly, to charge with a crime before a tribunal; accuse; institute a criminal prosecution against for some heinous offense: with of before the offense charged: as, to appeal a person of felony.

. To address; offer up, as an appeal.

To call for aid, mercy, sympathy, or the like; make an earnest ontreaty, or have the effect of an entreaty.

In law, to refer to a superior judge or court for the decision of a cause depending; specifically, to refer a decision of a lower court or judge to a higher one, for reëxamination and revisal.

To refer to another person or authority for the decision of a question controverted, or for the corroboration of testimony or facts; in general, to refer to some tribunal explicitly mentioned or implied.

To have recourse; resort for proof, decision, or settlement: as, to appeal to force.

[In all senses, with to or unto before the tribunal whose judgment is asked, and from before that whose decision is rejected.]

n. An address or invocation; a call for sympathy, mercy, aid, or the like; a supplication; an entreaty: as, an appeal for help; an appeal for mercy.

n. A proceeding taken to reverse a decision by submitting it to the review of a higher authority: as, an appeal to the house from a decision of the chair. In law:

n. Sometimes used in the above general meaning, so as to include writs of error, certiorari, etc.

n. Strictly, the removal of a cause or suit from a lower to a higher tribunal, in order that the latter may revise, and, if it seems needful, reverse or amend, the decision of the former.

n. The mode of procedure by which such removal is effected.

n. The right of removal to a higher court.

n. Formerly, a vindictive action at the suit of a party injured when the supposed criminal had been previously acquitted on an indictment or pardoned.

n. A summons to answer to a charge; a challenge.

n. A call to another to sanction or witness; a reference to another for proof or decision: as, in an oath a person makes an appeal to the Deity for the truth of his declaration.

n. (law) a legal proceeding in which the appellant resorts to a higher court for the purpose of obtaining a review of a lower court decision and a reversal of the lower court's judgment or the granting of a new trial

The premise for the book came across as inventive and unique even though it reminded me at times of Hal Clement's Mission of Gravity, but only because that's another book whose main appeal is the planet on which it takes place.

To make the title appeal to both must have been a bit of a design nightmare, but the developers at Codemasters managed to find the two things that would satisfy both the casual and the serious gamers, put them both in one game and not have them cancel each other out.

Engadget HD Podcast 108 - Filed under: Podcasts We start off talking about Baraka getting treated to an 8k transfer process en route to Blu-ray, which should make the title appeal to videophiles; which isn't to say we think Blu-ray is for "videophiles" only.

It may have escaped the mind of Jones, that those dual pillars she had highlighted; are so out of touch of reality that their influence on Fiji's populace has dwindled to a such a pathetic degree that, their appeal is actually anachronistic-oblivious to the changing demographics of Fiji's modern society.